Scarsdale Public Schools

The Scarsdale Public School District (Scarsdale Union Free School District) is a public school district whise boundaries encompass the entirety of Scarsdale, New York and part of the unincorporated portion of the town of Mamaroneck, New York. The district enrollment is 4,593 students in grades K-12 in seven schools. More than 90% of K-12 aged children residing in the village attend the public schools.[1]

Edgewood School

The average class size is around 20 students with a 97% student attendance rate.[2] The district is in good standing under the Every Student Succeeds Act, or ESSA.[2]

In June 2012, 24/7 Wall St. ranked the district as being the wealthiest in the entire country.[3]

Heathcote Elementary School received the National Blue Ribbon Award in 2020[4] and Scarsdale High School received it in 1983.[5]

Demographics

Enrollment by gender is split 51% male and 49% female.[6]

65% of students are white, 20% are Asian or Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander, 7% are Hispanic or Latino, 6% are Multicultural, and 1% are African American.[6]

As of 1991, students of East Asian origin made up 19.3% of the school district's students.[7] That year 26% of the students at Fox Meadow Elementary School were of Asian origin,[8] Over 25% of the students at another one of the elementary schools were of Asian origin.[7] The increase was chiefly due to a large number of Japanese businesspersons assigned to the New York City area moving to Scarsdale,[9] and also due to a large number of houses being occupied by "empty nesters".[7] Fox Meadow adjusted to its new population by giving new Japanese students American "buddies," establishing English-Japanese handbooks, and a parent-teacher association group oriented to Japanese parents.[8]

Student performance

As of that year SAT averages of the school system are over 100 points higher than the national average. In 2007 the SAT averages were 639 for mathematics, 617 for reading, and 636 on writing. The national averages were 505 for mathematics, 491 for reading, and 494 for writing. In 2006 there were 364 graduates from Scarsdale High School. Of them, almost 97% were scheduled to attend four-year universities. Elsa Brenner of The New York Times wrote that "The school system remains tough to beat and is clearly doing all it can to stay that way."[10]

Schools

The Scarsdale School District has five separate elementary schools: Edgewood, Fox Meadow, Greenacres, Heathcote, and Quaker Ridge.

Each elementary school is named after one of the five neighborhoods in Scarsdale.[10]

Scarsdale Middle School is the district middle school and Scarsdale High School is the district high school.

References

  1. "Planning Studies | Scarsdale, NY". www.scarsdale.com. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  2. "SCARSDALE UFSD | NYSED Data Site". data.nysed.gov. Retrieved 2021-04-03.
  3. Liebeskind, Ken. "Weston Is Second Wealthiest U.S. School District". The Weston Daily Voice. Archived from the original on 18 January 2014. Retrieved 26 July 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) ()
  4. Wallenstein, Joanne. "Heathcote Elementary Celebrates Blue Ribbon Award". Scarsdale. Retrieved 2023-03-27.
  5. "NATIONAL BLUE RIBBON SCHOOLS PROGRAM Schools Recognized 1982 Through 2015" (PDF).
  6. "2019 | SCARSDALE UFSD - Enrollment Data | NYSED Data Site". data.nysed.gov. Retrieved 2021-04-03.
  7. Handelman, David. "The Japanning of Scarsdale: East Meets Westchester." New York Magazine (ISSN 0028-7369). New York Media, LLC, April 29, 1991. Vol. 24, No. 17. 40-45. - CITED: p. 42.
  8. Handelman, David. "The Japanizing of Scarsdale: East Meets Westchester." New York Magazine (ISSN 0028-7369). New York Media, LLC, April 29, 1991. Vol. 24, No. 17. 40-45. - CITED: p. 44.
  9. Handelman, David. "The Japanizing of Scarsdale: East Meets Westchester." New York Magazine (ISSN 0028-7369). New York Media, LLC, April 29, 1991. Vol. 24, No. 17. 40-41. - CITED: p. 41.
  10. Brenner, Elsa. "Living in Scarsdale, N.Y. Houses Even Bigger, Scores Way Above Average." The New York Times. May 18, 2008. Retrieved on January 17, 2014.


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